Where you goin’ with that gun in your hand ? – Jimi in Hey Joe to Cybercrime

To those for whom homilies fall on deaf ears, this book by the Director General of Police recounting real life incidents and experiences, certainly gives hope to the innocents who have lost their life’s savings, and all but lost faith in God and Country. It’s a must-read

But more worrying is that the exalted verses of Kural, cutting across every political and religious divide, that I first found emblazoned in the T. Nagar Cybercrime Office, and then, in attractively organised rectangular proportion, on the entrance walls of the St. Thomas Mount Cybercrime Office – I concluded from the smile of the three ladies sitting there, they had just had given finishing touches and put their handiwork painstakingly up on the wall – fair enough, fair ladies – the only shortcoming is that it would not be heeded by those who need to do so – the criminal elements in the locations which had been identified, bound to have the last laugh.

Kural wrote in the most ancient language of the world, still extant and a standard of communication, Tamil, and cutting edge Truth at that, which the PM of India had a word for during his recent visit to the US. To what end ?

Job on hand, friends and countrymen !

And the Unwritten Words on the Wall, despite the awesome Tamil Kural put up – for those who were done in, whether young techie or elderly curmudgeon, and enter the portals of the thana or station, in distress, the words that have meaning may well be those rendered by an American well over a century ago – ” There’s a sucker born every minute ” . Hear, hear !

Bouquets, brickbats and balloons, all welcome

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